Only three hundred houses or so populate “Malaysia’s Beverly Hills,” an upscale residential area nestled in hills overlooking Kuala Lumpur—Bukit Nanas, Bukit Bintang, and Bukit Tunku. Of the three, Bukit Tunku remains the suburban

The house Seshan Design has crafted is a two-storey concrete box in a street of aging, clay tile-roofed bungalows, an outlier in one of the older residential suburbs of Petaling Jaya, Malaysia. The west-facing

The Terracotta House stands out like a sore thumb. The monolithic form elevates it from its neighbors, the majority of which are bungalows with pitched roofs. Clay tiles held together by steel rods wrap

People seek allowances, portions inside their home marked by margins—a desire manifested in the ache felt for the impression of space. In dense urban surroundings, it is difficult to translate this sense of longing